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Get it between 2025-01-01 to 2025-01-08. Additional 3 business days for provincial shipping.
In 1959, on April 20th, noted astronomer and ufologist Morris K. Jessup was found dead in his car in Dade County, Florida – an apparent suicide. Jessup, a firm believer that UFOs were not from outer space, was the first researcher to expound intelligently on the “terrestrial thesis,” and his death sparked rumors that he had been “taken out” by the thuggish “enforcers” of the “extraterrestrial thesis,” the Men in Black. Through a series of odd psychic messages, Anna Genzlinger, who had read about Jessup in a book about the Bermuda Triangle, was spurred to investigate his death as a murder, not a suicide. Genzlinger, who felt that Jessup had been driven to kill himself by government agents (because he “knew too much” about the Philadelphia Experiment), collected evidence to substantiate her intuition. The result was "The Jessup Dimension," first published in 1981 by Gray Barker’s Saucerian Press. By the time Barker died in 1984, the book had been thoroughly suppressed, eventually becoming so rare that original copies fetched thousands of dollars. In these pages, taken directly from the original manuscript, Genzlinger describes in gripping detail how Jessup’s ghost guided her in her investigation. Despite being warned off by several “spooks” in the UFO field, Genzlinger courageously continues on, ignoring threats of her imminent demise. This special 2014 edition features revealing introductions by researchers Peter Moon and Andy Colvin, as well as fascinating recent material from Laura Knight-Jadczyk, Adam Gorightly, and Jack Sarfatti. “An unexpected surprise... Sent shockwaves through the halls of power…” –Gray Barker “Fierce and fearless, yet warmhearted… Genzlinger totally wins you over…” –Dr. David J. Halperin, Journal of a UFO Investigator “Reignites one of the biggest controversies in the history of ufology…” –UFO Magazine